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contributor authorDunkerton, Timothy J.
date accessioned2017-06-09T14:27:32Z
date available2017-06-09T14:27:32Z
date copyright1987/08/01
date issued1987
identifier issn0022-4928
identifier otherams-19598.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4155731
description abstractThe subtropical mesospheric jet observed by the Nimbus 7 Limb Infrared Monitor of the Stratosphere in late 1978 was flanked to the north and south by regions of reversed potential vorticity gradient. In mid-December, enhanced planetary wave activity propagating upward into the mesosphere led to visible overreflection from the low-latitude reversed gradient region and rapid deceleration of the jet. It is argued, first, that the overreflection visible in the geopotential height field was probably genuine, and not likely to have been due to Rossby waves incident on an inertially unstable region. Nor was it due to the opposing mean meridional circulation. Second, the observed dominance of wave 1 in the overreflected flux may have been attributable to hemispheric barotropic instability: a low-wavenumber type of instability on the sphere related to the midlatitude modes discovered by Hartmann. In comparison to the barotropically unstable eigenmodes for higher zonal wavenumbers, the wave 1 mode has a slower growth rate but larger spatial extent. For practical purposes, it is a radiating mode excitable by sources in the far field. Equally important, the phase speed of the eigenmodes can be made exactly zero when the mean flow vanishes just within this region, as observed in mid-December 1978. Resonant excitation is therefore possible. Realistic opposing mean meridional advection has only a slight effect on the barotropic eigenmode, provided that high-wavenumber oscillations are filtered out of the calculation, acting to reduce the growth rate and shift the subtropical secondary amplitude maximum a few degrees towards the pole.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleResonant Excitation of Hemispheric Barotropic Instability in the Winter Mesosphere
typeJournal Paper
journal volume44
journal issue16
journal titleJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences
identifier doi10.1175/1520-0469(1987)044<2237:REOHBI>2.0.CO;2
journal fristpage2237
journal lastpage2251
treeJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences:;1987:;Volume( 044 ):;issue: 016
contenttypeFulltext


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